An announcement was expected Tuesday afternoon on whether the NFL will select New Orleans to host an unprecedented 11th Super Bowl in 2018. A study completed after the city's turn at hosting in 2013 concluded the event spurred $480 million in spending in the city, almost $263 million of that coming directly from visiting fans, news media and other people in town for business reasons surrounding the game.

With the three finalist cities for Super Bowl 2018 making their pitches to football team owners in Atlanta, news media in the other two contending sites -- Minneapolis and Indianapolis -- are reflecting on the potential economic wins:

In Indianapolis, which hosted a Super Bowl in 2012, much more recently than Minneapolis and therefore has its own recent economic impact study to cite, the Indianapolis Business Journal mentions the hundreds of millions of dollars in expected activity but focuses on the city's chances of winning the contest -- Indy an underdog in final push to win 2018 Super Bowl.